Showing posts with label SAGA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAGA. Show all posts

Monday, 17 June 2013

SAGA: Norman Warriors

Here are some more Normans for my SAGA warband. I painted them for Lead Painters League. These ones are from Black Tree Designs and are very characterful sculpts. In my Saga army they will be counted as Warriors. Norman warriors can be armed with either hand weapons or crossbows. 


Monday, 22 April 2013

SAGA: Norman Warlord and Knights

Having got a few games of SAGA under my belt  my fancies turned to expanding out the game a little and trying something new. With that in mind I decided that a new war-band was in order,and so I have started a Norman war-band. Bearing in mind that it took me two years to paint the Vikings and the Anglo-Danes, this is likely to be one of my slow boil projects. 



These figures are plastic ones made by Conquest Games  (confusingly, not Conquest Miniatures, which is a different company). I painted them for the first round of the Lead Painters League competition  run by the Lead Adventure Forum. This is the third year I have entered the LPL and I'm trying really hard to up my game and produce high quality figures. I think I have been guilty of taking a few short cuts to get figures finished recently  and that shows in the photos on the blog. That stops now, and it's back to basics, with good highlighting and blending. 
Due to the rules of the competition I will only post my pictures on the blog at the end of the weeks voting, so as not to unduly influence the votes. I have to paint at least 60 minis in 10 weeks, so it's something of a marathon rather than a sprint. The standard of the competition is always rather high, so wish me luck. 

Tuesday, 2 April 2013

SAGA: Another Clash of Arms

Leon (Pulp Citizen) and I managed to get in another couple of games of SAGA as we try to get our heads around the rules. I have added another unit to each of the warbands, making it up top 5 points each. My Anglo-Danes have a levy of 12 bowmen, while Leon opted for a rock-hard 4 hearthguard for his Vikings. 


My New Levy Archers Scrambling Through the Ruins of a Roman Temple

The first battle proved be be something of a none event. Leon was concerned about the Anglo-Danes ability to liberally scatter fatigue markers over the Vikings, and held back, playing too cautiously and thus playing into the Anglo-Danes hands. He tried a suicidal charge with his bezerkers against my warriors, which was predictably lethal, but that proved too late to inflict a decisive victory.


The Viking Invaders Form a Ragged Shield Wall


What followed was a debate about the Anglo-Danish battle board, and wither it had rather too many ways to add fatigue compared to the Viking's abilities to remove it. In order to try to resolve the debate we switched sides, so that I played the Vikings. 

The Anglo-Danish Shield Wall
In the second battle I went for it- rapidly moving my warlord and his berserkers towards the Anglo-Danish flank. My heathguard and warriors followed in his wake. I tried to ignore the fatigue markers Leon was sprinkling like fairy dust over my horde, and closed onto the Anglo-Danes. The battle was brutal and viscous:  Bezerkers are great for pulverising a unit, even if few make it through the battle. Leon's archers also nearly made my Warlord into a pin cushion but I managed some lucky saves. 

Berserkers Clash with the Anglo-Danish warriors and Cut Them Down!

In the end his warlord was cut down in battle, granting me victory. It was messy and not as decisive as I would have liked, but I think I proved that it is much better for the Vikings to get stuck in as fast as they can rather than hang back, especially when facing Anglo-Danes.




Wednesday, 20 February 2013

SAGA: Anglo-Danish Levy

The Anglo-Danish thane has called the levy to arms. From all across his lands the common men gather, ready to defend their homes from the marauding Viking raiders. 
This is the start of the next unit for my Anglo-Danish SAGA army- a levy of twelve bowmen. These figures are generic dark ages and first crusade era archers form Black Tree Designs  I picked them up in one of their wonderful 50% off sales. Cheep as chips an lovely models to paint. I have opted for dowdy greys and greens to make them stand out from their betters. 


Friday, 18 January 2013

First SAGA Game

Leon and I got together last week for a bit of a go at SAGA, the rules all the cool kids have been playing last year. Being something of a fashion victim/trend-setter and while I have had the rules for ages but this was actually the first time we have played the game as it has taken me about two years to get my warbands ready.

We found SAGA to be lots of fun- it is a radically different game to any others we have played, and it is fast pace and fun. We played with four point warbands, and found that we could easily get through a game in an hour, and that is with a rules set we are still leaning!
Combat was suitably brutal and short affair, and usually decisive one way or another. In the first game Leon's Viking berserkers cut a bloody swathe through my ranks. 
It strikes me that SAGA is one of those games that is easy to learn but difficult to master. There are lots of tactical decisions to be made, and that keeps it lively and fresh.

By the end of the day what had we learned? SAGA is a lot of fun, for sure, and I can see why it has become an instant hit in the gaming community  It is brutal, quick and bloody, which is the way I like my Viking action. Berserkers are REALLY scary and need to be managed (i.e. quickly killed) if you are fighting against them. We also need more units and more options. Four points is the minim sized war band recommended in the game, but I think another unit or two for either side would be great. I also plan to do some Normans, while Leon is going to do a Jomsviking warband. This will give us four different warbands, which will greatly increase the variation. In the mean time, we can carry on trying to master the subtle variations of the Viking and Anglo-Danish warbands, and once we have dome that we can swap armies and do it all again. I think there is a lot of life left in this game and we will defiantly come back to it!




Alfred Grey-beard looks out at the approaching Viking raiders.
"Sound the horn- let battle begin!"



 The Viking Warriors advance- eager for battle and plunder!


The Vikings sneak through the ruins of a Roman temple to out-flank the Anglo-Danish army


Anglo-Danish warriors from a shield wall- ready to meet their enemy. 

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

SAGA Monks and Markers

Ahead of this weeks SAGA game I have made a few (16) Fatigue markers. I made these by glueing metal Dark Age shields to copper pennies. The shields are made by Gripping Beasts. A lick of paint and a bit of flock, and hey presto! I am not sure how many of these markers I am going to need, but it's a start. 


Next is a group of Dark Age monks, made by Black Tree Designs. I bought them when BTD had one of their excellent 50% off sales for a few quid. I am not sure what I am going to use them for- perhaps they could be objectives for my Anglo-Danes ("Protect the monastery!") or they might even make up part of my Levy rabble. 


Monday, 7 January 2013

SAGA Warbands!

After many months of inconsistent progress I have finally finished two four point SAGA warbands, ahead of this weeks game. These are the minim size needed to play a reasonable game and, assuming I like the game, I will add some more troops at a later date. But for now, here they are...



 Alfred Greymane and his horde of (mostly) Christian Anglo-Danish warriors, ready to bravely defend England from marauding northmen. 



Ragnar the Fell Handed, bloody scourge of the seas, and his Viking raiders. 

Leon and I are going to get a game in on Friday- our first outing of the SAGA rules.  I will let you know how it goes!